Share these talks and lectures with your colleagues
Invite colleaguesThe climate crisis and regeneration
Abstract
This introductory view of the relationships and issues that connect contemporary urban regeneration with the climate crisis and its consequences represents a work in progress. While noting many close connections between regeneration and climate action, the paper suggests that full understanding of the connections and their further development requires much more work in clarifying the detail around climate change challenges. These challenges come at every level of society from individual people to international governments, and good practice is emerging. As well as mitigation and adaptation — the two key actions in response to climate change — there is need for clear communication, both to educate us all about these actions and to support campaigning to encourage other groups and agencies to do so as well. The burning question overall is what will good and effective regeneration look like under these changing conditions? There is a need to review and potentially replace past solutions with approaches that meet the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, so that we can become more fit for the 22nd century.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Andrew Maliphant is a freelance project management consultant with over 20 years’ experience of regeneration. Following early private sector employment Andrew took the Heritage Management postgraduate course at the Ironbridge Institute in Shropshire, England, effectively the first such course on practical regeneration. Since then he has worked on market town regeneration in Cumbria and the Forest of Dean, the regeneration of the city of Gloucester and a programme to break cycles of deprivation in housing areas in Oxfordshire, as well as policy work for the UK Government body the Countryside Agency (now Natural England). He is particularly interested in local and community approaches to regeneration, and is currently working on local determination at a parish level as well as supporting a range of social enterprise projects around the country. His Local Regeneration Handbook was published October 2017.1